In the Interest of J.S., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 20, 2022
Docket22-0028
StatusPublished

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In the Interest of J.S., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0028 Filed July 20, 2022

IN THE INTEREST OF J.S., Minor Child,

T.P., Mother, Petitioner-Appellee

J.S., Father, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Plymouth County, Daniel Vakulskas,

District Associate Judge.

The father appeals the termination of his parental rights in a private

termination action. AFFIRMED.

Kelsey Bauerly Langel of Bauerly & Langel, P.L.C., Le Mars, for appellee

mother.

John S. Moeller of John S. Moeller, P.C., Sioux City, for appellant father.

Missy Clabaugh of Clabaugh & Goslinga PLC, Sioux City, guardian ad litem

for minor child.

Considered by May, P.J., and Greer and Chicchelly, JJ. 2

GREER, Judge.

The district court granted the mother’s petition to terminate the father’s

parental rights to J.S., born in 2016, in a private termination action. The court

concluded the grounds for termination were satisfied under Iowa Code section

600A.8(3)(b) (abandonment) and (4) (failure to contribute) (2021). The father

appeals the termination, arguing he did not abandon J.S. and termination of his

parental rights is not in J.S.’s best interests.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

The mother and father divorced in May 2017, when J.S. was approximately

fourteen months old. The mother was awarded physical care of J.S., while the

father was given visits on Wednesday evenings and alternating weekends.

For the first approximately eighteen months after the parents divorced, the

father regularly exercised his visits with J.S. But then he began to miss his mid-

week visits, and the weekend visits became irregular. In June 2019, the father

visited J.S. just twice. In July, there was only one visit. And then, from late July

until December 2019, there were none. The father spent time with J.S. two

separate days in December, but, as of the October 2021 termination trial, he had

not seen him since those December visits (with the last visit being December 24,

2019). The mother continued to send the father messages, updating him about

J.S.’s medical needs, where he was being enrolled in school, and their new

address when she and J.S. moved. Other than a March 2020 request to see J.S.,1

1 The mother denied this request, responding that the family had entered self- quarantine due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the recommendations of public health officials. We agree with the district court’s conclusion that “[i]t was reasonable for [the mother] to deny the visit at that time due to the massive 3

the father neither responded to the mother’s messages nor sent any of his own.

In June 2021, about eighteen months after the father last had contact with J.S., the

mother filed the petition to terminate the father’s rights.

During those eighteen months, the mother began dating and married her

current husband, J.P. With the first meeting occurring when J.S. was close to four

years old, J.P. testified at the termination trial, explaining some of the activities he

and J.S. like to do and how he has taken on a parental role in J.S.’s life. J.P. would

like to adopt J.S.

J.S.’s kindergarten teacher testified at the termination trial. She praised J.S.

as “one of [her] top students,” “right on target with reading, math” and “a very good

critical thinker.” She described a time at the beginning of the school year when

J.S. chose to bring in a picture from the mother’s and J.P.’s wedding day.

According to the teacher, J.S.

said, “This is my dad, this is my mom,”and real quickly he just said, “This isn’t my real dad. My real dad—I don’t see my real dad anymore. He doesn’t really like kids,” and then he just quickly moved on to his next object in his bag. It was just a matter-of-fact quick little snippet that I saw.

The teacher also described a time when she asked the students to draw picture of

the time that they were happiest; J.S. drew a picture and said it was him and “[J.P.],

but we call him [J.P.’s nickname], he’s my dad, and we were swinging in the

backyard.” J.P. is a common subject of J.S.’s pictures; the teacher noted that J.S.

loves to talk about J.P. and “has a great admiration” for him.

uncertainty about COVID-19” and “because [the father] had not been in communication for months at a time.” 4

J.S. met with a therapist four times leading up to the termination trial—at

the suggestion of the guardian ad litem (GAL). The therapist did not schedule

additional sessions because J.S. “is doing well at home and school and doesn’t

appear to have any behavioral issues” and “[e]motionally he seems to be doing

well.” The therapist described J.S. as a “talkative and active little kid.” When

prompted to talk about the father, J.S.

talked about what he calls his first dad, referring to [the father], and then he would talk about it if I directly asked him questions. But other than that, he did not bring . . . him up on his own. . . . [When talking about the father], [t]here was, I would say, little to no emotion shown. It was kind of more of a fact of this was part of my life for a while, this is not something that is part of my life right now. I would say he didn’t have any emotional reaction other than a kid just talking about his life.

When the therapist asked him to draw his family, J.S. drew himself, the mother,

and J.P. The therapist observed J.S. with J.P. for a short while; she saw J.S. talk

to J.P., tell him about his school day, and give him a hug. She testified “they

seemed to have a comfortable relationship, . . . and seemed happy and healthy,

and [J.S.] seemed very comfortable with [J.P.]”

The therapist opined that there was not potential harm to J.S. if the father’s

rights are terminated, noting that J.S. had seen his father only twice in more than

two years—both in December 2019. She testified, “I think he’s, yeah, moved on,

and this is where he’s at in life now. That was when he was young. If you ask him,

that was a long time ago, because of his whole five years of life.” In contrast, she

saw the potential for harm if the father’s rights were not terminated and he came

back into J.S.’s life, testifying:

[I]t would be confusing for [J.S.], potentially, to understand why now this is coming back or why he is seeing him again, so just it would be 5

helping him understand all of that at his age, is really tricky sometimes, because in his mind, like I said, he’s kind of moved on from that chapter of his life already.

During his testimony, the father described some of the struggles he was

dealing with during the time he absented himself from J.S.’s life, including the loss

of a friend to suicide, a breach of trust in his relationship with his mother that

resulted in financial hardship for him, and experiencing depression. The father

suggested he was overwhelmed and had wrongly allowed his relationship with J.S.

to suffer but denied he ever meant to abandon J.S. During direct examination the

father testified as follows:

Q. Have you ever intended to abandon [J.S.]? A. Absolutely not. I would never do that. Q. You—you indicate that he’s in your thoughts every day? A. Every day. Q. So why . . . is there a disconnect between him being in your thoughts every day and then your trying to do something to see him? A. You know, before I wasn’t in any place to see him. Like, you know, I did everything that [the mother] asked me to do.

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Related

In the Interest of Q.G. and W.G., Minor Children
911 N.W.2d 761 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2018)
B.A. v. R.B.
357 N.W.2d 20 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1984)

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